@@KnarbMakes I would love to see you make 3D models on blender in a future video to see how you go about doing it. You seem to be the best in that regard out of everyone that I follow in this hobby.
Amazing build Knarb, the result turned out great! I dont know where you find the space to store all these giant projects though haha. Your videos are always so relaxing to watch, cant wait for the next one 😊.
Man... My mom would have loved this. She worked in HO. scale all the time and loved castles. I remember some of the really cool stuff she built. You are a crazy man for taking this thing on. Much props, it looks fantastic.
you builders are just getting better and better and not one of you builds the same way, so you are always in for a treat seeing how each channel tackles a build and its issues, i really was impressed with the mixes of media, well done Knarb
I'm glad your daughter called you out on the windows but I also can relate to doing so much work on a project that you're prematurely like "its done!" Amazing job
Super impressive! Thinking ahead to when your daughter gets in about 5th grade and has to build a model castle for school, with your help, she is going to CRUSH it!!!
That laser scored brick technique is so DOPE! I really like the way you did the red undercoat and then added the spotty off-white to jump start the texture. Nice! You are a meticulous man, Mr. Makes. I did it! : )
Subscribed! I've been to Hampton Court in person and it's an AMAZING place. Your work here (and on others I've watched so far) is absolutely phenomenal.
I don't watch this channel and i didn't watch this video, but I'm leaving a like and a comment purely because I respect the amount of effort this probably took.
Your work is impeccable! You said at around 8:40 that it didn’t look like much yet, and I was already thinking it looked so incredible! You’re so talented mate, would love to see more niche builds like this
You got a new subriber from a fellow card board artist. I find wood glue adds strength to my creations as well. So much so I've been able make sturdy and strong trays to hold my rock collection. The card board is stronger than plastic trays which collapses under the weight.
Beautifully made! I saw the title and was interested to see how different your cardboard construction technique is compared to mine. The answer... our techniques could be no more different if we tried! But this was wonderfully inspiring to me - thank you! :)
If you visit the UK I highly recommend visiting Hampton Court Palace, it's has Tudor and Georgian sections and is really interesting. They use actors playing King Henry and other people from the history. Excellent video sir. Great work.
I’d like to have all the tools you have, it really makes a big difference in the fine detail. I work in 1” scale and it would be great if I knew how to create items in blender and had a 3-d printer and a laser cutter. Although in 1” scale I make everything out of wood and there are a lot of resources for scale miniatures. I have built a 3 story Victorian house that is 4’ tall and 4’ wide, it has a variety of different shingles on the roof as well as the siding of the house. I have been collecting miniatures for over 40 years and have quite a collection of museum quality pieces. My house is stages to be a home built in 1897 but viewed on a summers day in 1927. This gave me the liberty to use both Victorian furnishings as well as modern 1920’s appliances. I have hired many artisans from all over the world to create pieces for me on commission. The house is completely electrified and every room is wired with its own circuit so that I can light it in any fashion I want to, the fireplace embers are on a flicker switch to give the illusion of live coals and they are on their own circuit as well as all the exterior lights. My goal is to create vignettes in miniature so that when photographed have the look of a full scale room. There are real parquet wood floors and over 30 different wallpapers used that I ordered from a company in Spain that produces miniature period wallpapers on acid free papers of the highest quality using archival inks. Each room have 3-4 different papers on the walls and ceilings and there are a total of 11 rooms on three floors and two attics and a rooftop conservatory of glass that is my miniature art studio. I got my inspiration from seeing the miniature castle of Queen Mary in which every detail was perfectly reproduced. So I have real crystal chandeliers, imported fine dining China from England real sterling silver flatware and serving pieces, intricate hand tatted miniature lace table runners real linens on the beds and even some very rare pieces made from ivory. There’s a large collection of bronze and gold statues and a library filled with scale books that are fully printed and readable, with a jewelers loupe of course. I wanted all the miniatures to be made from the real thing that the life size objects were made from. I have a collection of faberge eggs with miniature jewels and pearls inside, a collection of hand blown rose colored glassware, and bottles of wine that are actually filled with real wine, in very tint glass bottles. I have put years into collecting and building and decorating the interiors and have now the project of completing the exterior landscaping with hundreds of miniature paper flowers and a large jacaranda tree in full bloom that I had custom made for me. There is an Art Deco bedroom which is my favorite period style and I still have to have all the custom made draperies commissioned for the many windows of the house. You would really like my house as you are a perfectionist like me. In one of the attic rooms there is a collection of antique childrens toys and a miniature house that is in perfect scale of 1/144tn scale and has each room decorated and furnished with very tiny pieces that I would love to have had a 3-d printer to make. There are a lot of miniature dogs and cats that are perfectly scaled with real fur and a peacock with miniature feathers. Each room tells a story and is staged to look as though someone just walked out of the room, a hidden wall safe is behind a mirror over the bedroom fireplace and holds my grandmothers wedding rings. I plan to donate the house to a museum or library where it can be enjoyed by many viewers and kept in a glass case for protection, I have invested over $50,000 on all of the furnishings. The dining room china cost $6,000 and took over a year to be completed and is in the blue willow pattern that was accurate to the Victorian era, it is made from real bone China and painted and fired using the same process of full scale China. Well I had fun watching your build and would like to have my own RUclips channel to show my creation. I’m 60 years old and do not have the computer skills that you have, funny thing is that when I was in college in 1980 I was asked if I wanted to take a computer class, and I said no, because I thought computers were just another passing fad like 8 track cassettes and would never be that popular. Boy was I wrong about that one.
That sounds incredible! Never too late to learn new tech if youre motivated, especially with a project like that. Check out maker spaces or libraries nearby that would have a 3d printer.
After I've seen your Rapunzel-Tower Build I thought it'll get really tough to build another impressive piece but I'm really impressed by your Tudor Palace!
Reminding me of the project I did in Economic Management Sciences. We had to build a house with cardboard and sell it. I enjoyed it. This must have been super fun to do.
I want those chimneys! This is brilliant - I particularly like that it goes back to basics of modelling (cardboard and wood glue) for the structure with modern technology for the tiny repetitive details (how long to hand carve the brickwork!?!). The front widow is beautiful and the chimneys are the crowning glory as far as I’m concerned (on the real thing as well). Nice paint job just missing the stone details on the towers but it’s being picky to fault the whole build for that.
does feel like you're starting to leave the miniature realm and arrive in the daunting world of bigatures, would be SO cool to see the whole castle but you're right its HUGE. Good job tho, this blows my mind. I've kinda toyed with the idea of making things of this nature, only much smaller, like houses I've lived in or wanted to live in or places from shows, movies or anime I've loved but I almost always talk myself out of the idea before starting as its a LOT of work and I've got like 0 skills with painting or air-brushign.
I have been waiting for someone to make a model of Hampton Court. Well done. A word of caution though about using cardboard as your substrate. It is not a long term stable product and is very susceptible to warping with humidity. 3/16" thick black or white gatorboard is a better option but it is expensive, especially when you consider that cardboard is basically free. It is rigid but can be cut with a utility knife. A very stable product for model making.
I had not considered excessive humidity, I'll admit. I've done builds with foamcore/gatorboard and its always so much more expensive. Thanks for tuning in Mark!
@@KnarbMakes I forgot to mention that you can probably get scraps of gatorboard for free from a frame shop. I used to own a frame shop and I would have been very happy to donate my scraps which had little use to me but would be a good size for model making. Long skinny pieces and 8x10's for example.
What a cool project, Knarb! The 3D printed parts really took it to another level.
Thanks Caleb. I didnt end up recording making them as much as I would have liked, but I guess it gets the point across.
Mr Boyley sunday wasnt the same without your video.
@@KnarbMakes I would love to see you make 3D models on blender in a future video to see how you go about doing it. You seem to be the best in that regard out of everyone that I follow in this hobby.
@@lordscan1047 i agree :( i was pretty sad man...
Knarb, your builds are so dern AMBITIOUS! For me, this one was jaw-dropping! Phenomenal work.
Glad you like them! thx man!
I /think/ the fake moat is called a ha-ha. It was a common landscaping feature that many of Henry VIII's properties had. This is an amazing model!
VERY cool project Knarb!! Fantastic castle my man❤️🙂
I live just around the corner from Hampton Court and visit often, I must say you've done a fantastic job on this model.
Me too
@@dodorosey6245 Same here - often went on school trips there
This looks incredible! Really well done. Those chimneys are amazing
Thanks Eric!
I would just like to say, as a British person, I have been there in person and honestly that is a perfect replica, well done.
nice of you to make a model of my summer home. Thanks Knarb
Its a very nice home. You must be proud
Amazing build Knarb, the result turned out great! I dont know where you find the space to store all these giant projects though haha. Your videos are always so relaxing to watch, cant wait for the next one 😊.
I love the combination of technique and materials from humble cardboard through to 3D prints. Epic build!
Man... My mom would have loved this. She worked in HO. scale all the time and loved castles. I remember some of the really cool stuff she built. You are a crazy man for taking this thing on. Much props, it looks fantastic.
Is she still with us?
@@moo342 No. Passed in 2005
Very very neat
you builders are just getting better and better and not one of you builds the same way, so you are always in for a treat seeing how each channel tackles a build and its issues, i really was impressed with the mixes of media, well done Knarb
Thanks so much Polly and I really appreciate the support. Keep crafting!
I'm glad your daughter called you out on the windows but I also can relate to doing so much work on a project that you're prematurely like "its done!"
Amazing job
Im asking her what she thinks for every project now.
woooow. Killing it Knarb!
Proper use of technology to recreate the decorative elements - love it! Can’t wait for the painting.
Super impressive! Thinking ahead to when your daughter gets in about 5th grade and has to build a model castle for school, with your help, she is going to CRUSH it!!!
I look forward to when she has those projects :)
Planning on still letting her do most of it, just with a few nudges in the right direction.
The narration makes this so relaxing. The use of traditional and modern materials and techniques is as impressive and inspiring.
This is an awesome build! I would love to see more historical structures if you decided to build them! Great work!
I wish I had your talent... I could show my blind best friend who loves history all the beautiful mansions and castles.....
As a British person who has visited Hampton court you have really captured its beauty
The trim looked exhausting, great work. The resin windows are a really neat idea.
Haha, yeah the trim was quite tedious
That laser scored brick technique is so DOPE!
I really like the way you did the red undercoat and then added the spotty off-white to jump start the texture. Nice!
You are a meticulous man, Mr. Makes. I did it! : )
Oh my God, is there nothing you can't build. I had to join. You are so talented. I hope so many more come to support you.
Thank you so much Catherine!
I used to love near Hampton Court Palace and pass it on the way to work for years. Great place to visit.
Awesome work Knarb!! I could go visit that place tomorrow, have seen it many times and you nailed it!!
Subscribed!
I've been to Hampton Court in person and it's an AMAZING place.
Your work here (and on others I've watched so far) is absolutely phenomenal.
I live down the road from Hampton Court. Awesome model
I don't watch this channel and i didn't watch this video, but I'm leaving a like and a comment purely because I respect the amount of effort this probably took.
Wth have a subscriber too
This is my first video of yours and when I say I'm impressed, I really mean it.
That's simply amazing so definitely gonna watch more now
1000% his school teachers looked at his models from home and looked at him and said 'tf you made this, who did you pay?'
Insane build! I really enjoy the way you mix scratch building with printing and laser cutting. It's so cool to see it all come together.
Your work is impeccable! You said at around 8:40 that it didn’t look like much yet, and I was already thinking it looked so incredible! You’re so talented mate, would love to see more niche builds like this
Thank you so much!
You got a new subriber from a fellow card board artist. I find wood glue adds strength to my creations as well. So much so I've been able make sturdy and strong trays to hold my rock collection. The card board is stronger than plastic trays which collapses under the weight.
Beautifully made! I saw the title and was interested to see how different your cardboard construction technique is compared to mine. The answer... our techniques could be no more different if we tried! But this was wonderfully inspiring to me - thank you! :)
Thanks for tuning in. And you're right, just saw some of your vids and have learned some new techniques. Awesome vids!
@@KnarbMakes thank you!
Okay you have sold me on the Lazer cutter
If you visit the UK I highly recommend visiting Hampton Court Palace, it's has Tudor and Georgian sections and is really interesting. They use actors playing King Henry and other people from the history. Excellent video sir. Great work.
Its on my list of things to do!
You, sir, must have the patience of a saint! Such detail really brings it to life.
I am completely blown away at the level of detail. Absolutely amazing.
Extraordinary! Your talent and attention to detail make it seem far easier than I expect it was. Well done, my dear.
I’d like to have all the tools you have, it really makes a big difference in the fine detail. I work in 1” scale and it would be great if I knew how to create items in blender and had a 3-d printer and a laser cutter. Although in 1” scale I make everything out of wood and there are a lot of resources for scale miniatures. I have built a 3 story Victorian house that is 4’ tall and 4’ wide, it has a variety of different shingles on the roof as well as the siding of the house. I have been collecting miniatures for over 40 years and have quite a collection of museum quality pieces. My house is stages to be a home built in 1897 but viewed on a summers day in 1927. This gave me the liberty to use both Victorian furnishings as well as modern 1920’s appliances. I have hired many artisans from all over the world to create pieces for me on commission. The house is completely electrified and every room is wired with its own circuit so that I can light it in any fashion I want to, the fireplace embers are on a flicker switch to give the illusion of live coals and they are on their own circuit as well as all the exterior lights. My goal is to create vignettes in miniature so that when photographed have the look of a full scale room. There are real parquet wood floors and over 30 different wallpapers used that I ordered from a company in Spain that produces miniature period wallpapers on acid free papers of the highest quality using archival inks. Each room have 3-4 different papers on the walls and ceilings and there are a total of 11 rooms on three floors and two attics and a rooftop conservatory of glass that is my miniature art studio. I got my inspiration from seeing the miniature castle of Queen Mary in which every detail was perfectly reproduced. So I have real crystal chandeliers, imported fine dining China from England real sterling silver flatware and serving pieces, intricate hand tatted miniature lace table runners real linens on the beds and even some very rare pieces made from ivory. There’s a large collection of bronze and gold statues and a library filled with scale books that are fully printed and readable, with a jewelers loupe of course. I wanted all the miniatures to be made from the real thing that the life size objects were made from. I have a collection of faberge eggs with miniature jewels and pearls inside, a collection of hand blown rose colored glassware, and bottles of wine that are actually filled with real wine, in very tint glass bottles. I have put years into collecting and building and decorating the interiors and have now the project of completing the exterior landscaping with hundreds of miniature paper flowers and a large jacaranda tree in full bloom that I had custom made for me. There is an Art Deco bedroom which is my favorite period style and I still have to have all the custom made draperies commissioned for the many windows of the house. You would really like my house as you are a perfectionist like me. In one of the attic rooms there is a collection of antique childrens toys and a miniature house that is in perfect scale of 1/144tn scale and has each room decorated and furnished with very tiny pieces that I would love to have had a 3-d printer to make. There are a lot of miniature dogs and cats that are perfectly scaled with real fur and a peacock with miniature feathers. Each room tells a story and is staged to look as though someone just walked out of the room, a hidden wall safe is behind a mirror over the bedroom fireplace and holds my grandmothers wedding rings. I plan to donate the house to a museum or library where it can be enjoyed by many viewers and kept in a glass case for protection, I have invested over $50,000 on all of the furnishings. The dining room china cost $6,000 and took over a year to be completed and is in the blue willow pattern that was accurate to the Victorian era, it is made from real bone China and painted and fired using the same process of full scale China. Well I had fun watching your build and would like to have my own RUclips channel to show my creation. I’m 60 years old and do not have the computer skills that you have, funny thing is that when I was in college in 1980 I was asked if I wanted to take a computer class, and I said no, because I thought computers were just another passing fad like 8 track cassettes and would never be that popular. Boy was I wrong about that one.
That sounds incredible! Never too late to learn new tech if youre motivated, especially with a project like that. Check out maker spaces or libraries nearby that would have a 3d printer.
BEHOLD, this man's planning skills
This is incredibly realistic. I've been there a few times and its impressive how much detail you've captured.
Absolutely awesome dude! Your builds are so diverse. Can't wait to see more!
More Sci-fi like Star Wars! This was beautiful!
This looks really cool and very realistic! I think this is my favourite project you've made so far!
Please PLEASE build all of it. I'M BEGGING
Love this build so much! The details are so good. Thanks for sharing it with us!
After I've seen your Rapunzel-Tower Build I thought it'll get really tough to build another impressive piece but I'm really impressed by your Tudor Palace!
8:36 "I guess it doesn't look like much yet..." WHAT?? It already looks amazing! 😂
Such an epic build, great work on the bigature Knarb!
That technique with the cured dyed resin in the windows is absolutely genius
Dude!!! That is epic! I love it.
Brilliant! I’d love to see you make the whole thing!!
Excellent work mate
Your daughter is very lucky you're her Dad
Your daughter was right, the windows add so much when coloured!
What a combination of techniques!!
Wonderful result 💜
Amazing piece of work Knarb! Well done!
really impressive work
Reminding me of the project I did in Economic Management Sciences. We had to build a house with cardboard and sell it. I enjoyed it. This must have been super fun to do.
I live in England and happen to go to king Henry viii school, cool coincidence great built😀
Incredibly Fantastic!!!! See you next time. :D
Epic build! Very cool Knarb.
Just WOW! I would love to try an epic piece like this. Such beautiful work.
You’ve been absolutely killing it recently!!!
This is absolutely bananas
Beautiful model!
I want those chimneys! This is brilliant - I particularly like that it goes back to basics of modelling (cardboard and wood glue) for the structure with modern technology for the tiny repetitive details (how long to hand carve the brickwork!?!). The front widow is beautiful and the chimneys are the crowning glory as far as I’m concerned (on the real thing as well). Nice paint job just missing the stone details on the towers but it’s being picky to fault the whole build for that.
Thank you! You can grab the STLs if you're into 3d printing, linked in the description.
love it! Great work Knarb
Thanks Alex!
Great reproduction! I used to love making doll houses out of cardboard as a child. They were not nearly as impressive haha.
Amazing work dude. Your voice is somewhat relaxing too, compliments the video very well lol. Love your work.
does feel like you're starting to leave the miniature realm and arrive in the daunting world of bigatures, would be SO cool to see the whole castle but you're right its HUGE. Good job tho, this blows my mind. I've kinda toyed with the idea of making things of this nature, only much smaller, like houses I've lived in or wanted to live in or places from shows, movies or anime I've loved but I almost always talk myself out of the idea before starting as its a LOT of work and I've got like 0 skills with painting or air-brushign.
This is really cool to watch
Amazingly realistic! Stunning!
you are making us spoiled with these awesome projects!
*_Very nice work man._*
Wow, Knarb. This is amazing work!
Crazy talented
You're a madman.
Awesome build! I always wondered if one could use 3D printer resin for general UV resin applications so thanks for showing that it can be done!
It's amazing how the paint make it all from stuff to life.
No offense on your builder skills at all.
Well done.
Hey I’ve been there! It’s definitely haunted. Looks great awesome job!!
Woah,mate that is a totally awesome, but bonkers build. Love it!
So beautiful, IMO you are super underrated and should have so much more subs.
You are on another level
this is cool the history nerd in me is super pleased 😂
Incredible work! So beautiful.
I have been waiting for someone to make a model of Hampton Court. Well done. A word of caution though about using cardboard as your substrate. It is not a long term stable product and is very susceptible to warping with humidity. 3/16" thick black or white gatorboard is a better option but it is expensive, especially when you consider that cardboard is basically free. It is rigid but can be cut with a utility knife. A very stable product for model making.
I had not considered excessive humidity, I'll admit. I've done builds with foamcore/gatorboard and its always so much more expensive. Thanks for tuning in Mark!
@@KnarbMakes I forgot to mention that you can probably get scraps of gatorboard for free from a frame shop. I used to own a frame shop and I would have been very happy to donate my scraps which had little use to me but would be a good size for model making. Long skinny pieces and 8x10's for example.
That is beautiful!
Up to museum standard , very well done !
What I like about knarb is that he bases his creations off of his sponsors
As someone who has been here, ya nailed it.
Holy moly. I guess you need to do a next new shelf video soon 😅 this thing is great.
I knew there was a little girl involved in his creative process. Daughters are the best.
That is pretty sweet!
Absolutely Breathtakingly beautiful full of interesting amazing details and wow the design is outstanding 😍😍❣️❣️
Beautiful work!
Extremely well done man, love the video :)
Great video! I really enjoyed it! The castle looks amazing!